Beginner's question - why doesn't a variable overwrite when vectorizing a loop?

1 view (last 30 days)
I am learning using the book "Matlab for Engineers and Scientists." Unfortunately this book does not provide answers to the exercises.
I've never been good at writing for loops, or really understanding how to index well, so I am running into problems.
Here's the one at hand. I need to convert a for loop into a vectorization. For simplicity I've written a short example:
s=0;
for n=1:10;
s=s+n
end
This gives the answers 1, 3, 6, 10, 15, 21, 28, 36, 45, 55. When I try to vectorize it like this, s does not overwrite itself after each iteration, but stays at zero:
s=0;
n=1:10;
s=s+n
This gives s=1:10.
Now if s is a simple variable to explain I could just make it a vector as well, but when I don't know what its values will be I can't specify it beforehand. Any help would be appreciated. I know this is simple, but going through this book, the earlier examples aren't relevant to this type of problem.
EDIT: Here is the actual question:
====================
Work out by hand the output of the following script for n = 4:
n = input( ’Number of terms? ’ );
s = 0;
for k = 1:n
s = s + 1 / (k ˆ 2);
end;
disp(sqrt(6 * s))
If you run this script for larger and larger values of n, you will find that the output approaches a well-known limit. Can you figure out what it is? Now rewrite the script using vectors and array operations. ====================
The limit is pi. When I try to do this with vectors I am entering the following:
====================
s=0;
n=4; (just to start)
k=1:1:n;
s=s+1./k.^2;
a=[sqrt(6.*s)];
====================
Of course, this doesn't work. What am I not getting? (Other that you can't overwrite variables if you aren't doing a for loop...but the exercise asks specifically to do this not using a for loop)

Accepted Answer

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 5 Feb 2014
cumsum(1:10)
  3 Comments
Matt J
Matt J on 6 Feb 2014
Edited: Matt J on 6 Feb 2014
Vectorization is all about doing the same thing to every value
@Walter
Actually the way I've seen "vectorization" used, it just means "feeding vector/matrix arguments to optimized MATLAB functions" instead of working on their indiviudal elements manually. Your use of CUMSUM qualifies perfectly as an example of vectorization, even though its not doing the same thing to every value.
B.M.
B.M. on 7 Feb 2014
Ok, I think I get what you're saying, thanks. I'm just going to post the actual question (to the original post) so you can see what the exercise asks.

Sign in to comment.

More Answers (1)

B.M.
B.M. on 5 Feb 2014
The above was just an example. I just need to know how to get a variable to overwrite itself outside of a for loop.
  7 Comments
Matt J
Matt J on 7 Feb 2014
I have seen your EDIT and fail to see how it is not a sum. The only difference I see relative to your original example is that the formula for the terms in the series being summed is different 1./k.^2
B.M.
B.M. on 7 Feb 2014
Edited: B.M. on 7 Feb 2014
Ah, you're right. Sorry. I've been doing other exercises since I posted this and didn't remember accurately what the issue was here. I'll go back and look again at the earlier examples.
EDIT: I got it. Jeez. I think I was fatigued or something after doing all those exercises, now it seems very clear. Thanks to all of you.

Sign in to comment.

Categories

Find more on Loops and Conditional Statements in Help Center and File Exchange

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!